This article I wrote appeared on the Newsmax.com web site on Friday, May 13, 2022.
To Win, Conservatives Must Forge Consensus With Catholic Latinos – By George J. Marlin
Posted May 13, 2022 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed, Newsmax
Gov. Hochul’s Disastrous Budget – By George J. Marlin
Posted May 3, 2022 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed, Blank Slate Media, Kathy Hochul
The following appeared on Monday, May 2, 2022, in the Blank Slate Media newspaper chain and on its website, theisland360.com:
In January, Gov. Kathy Hochul proposed a bloated $217 billion state budget for the 2022-2023 fiscal year that the comptroller’s office indicated contained various budget gimmicks, including “billions of dollars allocated to broadly defined purposes with little or no specificity.”
Hochul’s budget is to be balanced using billions in Federal COVID relief dollars that will not be replenished. Hence, her reckless spending will create serious fiscal problems in the post-election years and will put the state on the road to financial insolvency.
While Hochul’s original proposal took care of most special interest groups (i.e., teacher unions), it wasn’t enough for Democratic legislators who have an insatiable appetite for political swag.
As a result, the New York Post bellowed, “Albany returned to the bad old stinky ways of passing a budget.”
The budget was negotiated in secret with the infamous “three people in the room”—the governor, Assembly speaker and Senate majority leader.
Due to political bickering, the budget was not passed on time. It was eventually approved in the middle of the night a week after the new fiscal year began on April 1.
And the final product, laden with political fat and questionable non-budget items, pushes spending to a record-breaking $220 billion; 18 percent higher than in 2020. (The Empire Center for Public Policy reports the state will be spending $6,987 per second.)
Hochul surrendered to the far left on most items to secure money for the biggest financial boondoggle in recent history: the Buffalo Bills stadium deal.
Six hundred million dollars of state funds have been allocated to subsidize the building of a new stadium in Erie County, which is coincidentally where Gov. Hochul resides.
This is an irresponsible expense to buy off voters in Western New York and will be the poster child for corporate welfare for years to come.
Contrary to claims, it is not an investment that enhances the local economy.
An analysis published by the Cato Institute reported “the presence of pro sport teams in 37 metropolitan areas in our sample had no measurably positive impact on the overall growth of real per capita income in those areas.”
Baltimore’s Camden Yards, for example, has generated about $3 million a year in economic benefits but cost Maryland state taxpayers $14 million annually in debt service payments.
The fact that sports facilities have proved to be a poor investment explains why wealthy team owners are not willing to fork over their own money to build them.
“Publicly funded stadiums are, at best, an inefficient investment of taxpayers’ dollars for the meager benefits produced,” said the National Taxpayers Union in a 2007 study. “At worst, [they’re] massive payments to rich team owners and players at the expense of ordinary taxpayers.”
On another front, Hochul caved into the health care union and will spend $7.7 billion for pay raises to the home-health industry.
Also, the budget extends to 2029 the $500 million annual subsidy to film production studios.
And the Empire Center reports state public employee unions received an incredible election year gift: “There is a partial rollback of successful, decade-old public employee pension reforms that saved taxpayers about a billion dollars a year…. [T]he budget reduces vesting periods from 10 years to five and cuts contribution rates in some cases.”
As for Hochul’s bail law changes, they are merely marginal—good for political commercials but not for the public.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams was very disappointed that judges were granted only a little more discretion when setting bail. “I think we have a lot more to do,” he said.
New York City’s PBA president, Pat Lynch, complained the revisions are “political window dressing that won’t do much to change the reality on the streets.”
The Detective Endowment Association leader declared: “No mandatory for gun possession, which the DEA supports, means more shootings. Judges must be allowed to consider prior convictions and recidivism.”
Hochul’s Democratic primary opponent, Congressman Tom Suozzi, summed up the election year giveaway budget thusly: “Instead of using this opportunity to lower taxes, reduce crime and make New York more affordable, Kathy Hochul showed her inexperience by botching the budget process and saddling New Yorkers with billions more in spending, including the biggest tax giveaway in NFL history to build a new Bills stadium.”
Aptly put.
Bill Clinton’s Democratic Party is Now The Party of Jackson — Jesse That Is – By George J. Marlin
Posted April 22, 2022 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed, Newsmax
This article I wrote appeared on the Newsmax.com web site on Friday, April 22, 2022.
Hochul stumbles on crime and corruption – By George J. Marlin
Posted April 19, 2022 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed, Blank Slate Media, Kathy Hochul
The following appeared on Monday, April 18, 2022, in the Blank Slate Media newspaper chain and on its website, theisland360.com:
In his masterpiece, “The Wasteland,” Nobel Laureate T.S. Eliot forewarned “April is the cruelest month.” And so it has been for Gov. Hochul.
First, there was the governor’s rather lame reaction to the April 12 shooting horror on the N train in which a man wounded 29 with a 9mm semi-automatic gun.
At a press conference with the city’s top cops and FBI agents, she said, “This morning New Yorkers left their homes en route to a normal day. That sense of tranquility and normalness was disrupted, brutally disrupted, by an individual so cold-hearted and depraved of heart, that they had no caring about the individuals that they assaulted as they simply went about their daily lives.”
Not a caring person? Good Lord! You think the governor at such a moment would call the mass shooter for what he is—a vicious evil monster.
If nothing else, it proves Hochul has a political tin ear.
Events surrounding the resignation of her lieutenant governor, Brian Benjamin, on the same day as the shooting incident provides additional evidence to prove my point.
Benjamin was indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly taking part in a bribery scheme. He is accused of “falsifying campaign donations forms, misleading city authorities and giving false information as part of a background check to become lieutenant governor” in 2021.
Benjamin agreed to accept the lieutenant governor appointment even though he had received a federal subpoena.
Concealing that fact from the governor and the state troopers was just plain old dumb.
But for the governor not to catch wind that an investigation was afoot and to say as recently as April 7 that she had the “utmost confidence in my lieutenant governor” indicates to me just how isolated she is in the governor’s mansion.
Anyone who has spent time in Albany knows that the primary activity in the halls of the capital is gossiping.
So, I find it hard to believe that there weren’t any murmurings about Benjamin’s troubles. Particularly when there were already published reports in The City that Benjamin’s failed campaign for New York City comptroller had “benefitted from suspicious donations as well as ethical concerns about his use of campaign funds for a wedding celebration and car expenses.”
Hochul’s statement announcing Benjamin’s resignation was also lame. Instead of denouncing Benjamin as a scoundrel for deceiving her, she meekly said: “While the legal process plays out, it’s clear to both of us that he cannot continue to serve a lieutenant governor…. New Yorkers deserve absolute confidence in their government, and I will continue working every day to deliver for them.”
That statement doesn’t increase my confidence in the Hochul administration.
Hochul’s opponent in the Democratic primary, Congressman Tom Suozzi, succinctly described the governor’s precarious situation: “Kathy Hochul’s poor judgment and lack of executive experience are on full display with her handpicked running mate. Why did she pick someone who not only had [an] impending ethics complaint but also a vocal supporter of defunding the police?”
To add to Hochul’s woes, the lieutenant governor she runs with in the general election might be a political foe.
Because it’s too late to replace Benjamin on the primary ballot, the winner may be the radical leftist Ana Maria Archila, who is aligned with Hochul’s primary opponent Jumaane Williams.
The last time a Democratic candidate got stuck with a lieutenant governor not of their choosing was in 1982 when Mario Cuomo was saddled with Ed Koch’s running mate, Westchester County Executive Alfred DelBello.
But Mario Cuomo never forgot a slight, and for DelBello to have supported his opponent was unforgivable.
To make life miserable for DelBello, Cuomo slashed his staff in half and kept him on a short leash.
When DelBello publicly complained that Cuomo ignored his advice, the governor told The New York Times, “He obviously chose Koch over me. He had to adjust to his own delusional expectations.”
DelBello resigned his post out of disgust in December 1984.
I doubt Hochul, if elected to a full-term in November, would have the tenacity to pull a “Cuomo” on an unwanted lieutenant governor who may work against her and oppose her policies.
Finally, there was another April cruelty that will soon haunt Gov/ Hochul and every taxpayer: the disastrous, reckless $220 billion state budget she signed into law.
But more on that mess in my next column.
Do Elephants and Men Have Equal Rights? – By George J. Marlin
Posted April 9, 2022 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed, Newsmax
This article I wrote appeared on the Newsmax.com web site on Friday, April 8, 2022.